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NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA.


NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA National Ballet of Canada, the leading Canadian ballet company. Based in Toronto, it was founded (1951) by Celia Franca (1921–2007) and modeled on Sadler's Wells (now the Royal Ballet).  

CITY CENTER OCTOBER 6-11, 1998

REVIEWED BY AMANDA SMITH

The undercurrent of anguish that ran through so many of National Ballet of Canada's dances made the company's first New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 appearance in a decade less upbeat, less of a pleasure, than it would have been otherwise. This is a ranking international company that does its share of the ballet classics at home, but the programs it brought consisted solely of contemporary Canadian choreography, most of it plotless. As it presented itself here, it's a company in search of choreographic variety in its new work.

The choreographic vision of James Kudelka, artistic director since 1996, sets the tone. His own introspective in·tro·spect  
intr.v. in·tro·spect·ed, in·tro·spect·ing, in·tro·spects
To engage in introspection.



[Latin intr
, fluid Musings (1991) to Mozart's Quintet for Clarinet and Strings in A Major, a group work performed with the musicians on-stage, uses restrained ballet technique. In its melancholy, mysterious second section, a woman is handled by three men who often shield their eyes with their arms. The third section is its reverse, a quartet for three women and a man, curiously punctuated by a stylistically out-of-place little shuffle.

Kudelka's 1977 Washington Square, based on the Henry James novella novella: see novel.
novella

Story with a compact and pointed plot, often realistic and satiric in tone. Originating in Italy during the Middle Ages, it was often based on local events; individual tales often were gathered into collections.
 about the making of a spinster SPINSTER. An addition given, in legal writings, to a woman who never was married. Lovel. on Wills, 269. , is straightforwardly and clearly rendered, with Rebekah Rimsay as the spinster and Ryan Boorne the caddish suitor, who first betrays her and then is himself rejected. (Martine Lamy and Johan Persson led an alternate cast.) Kudelka's Four Seasons, to the Vivaldi score, made twenty years later, is more open, both emotionally and stylistically. It has wonderful costumes by Carmen Carmen

throws over lover for another. [Fr. Lit.: Carmen; Fr. Opera: Bizet, Carmen, Westerman, 189–190]

See : Faithlessness


Carmen

the cards repeatedly spell her death. [Fr.
 Alie and Denis Denis, king of Portugal: see Diniz.  Lavoie. Aleksandar Antonijevic was the man who wends Wends or Sorbs, Slavic people (numbering about 60,000) of Brandenburg and Saxony, E Germany, in Lusatia. They speak Lusatian (also known as Sorbic or Wendish), a West Slavic language with two main dialects: Upper Lusatian, nearer to Czech, and  his way through the seasons--a Shakespearean metaphor for the ages of man--ending eventually in a Pieta position in the arms of a mature woman; she is one of four older dancers called into service for this piece, their presence giving the work a suggestion of ancestry, both personal and artistic.

Desir is misnamed mis·name  
tr.v. mis·named, mis·nam·ing, mis·names
To call by a wrong name.


misnamed
Adjective

having an inappropriate or misleading name:
: it should be called Ecstasy, and it provided the only angst-free entry in the company's run as well as some very welcome unison dancing. With its rapt couplings by dancers in glamorous party dress, this Kudelka work is reminiscent of Twyla Tharp's Nine Sinatra Songs.

Dominique Dumais, a second soloist with the company and a choreographer to watch, showed the weight of absence, to contemporary music by Eric Cadesky. The dance for nine in white spandex led by Stephanie Hutchison is aerobic, full of flinging limbs and lush modern angst. In her Tides of Mind, a duet danced by Jennifer Fournier and Rex Harrington to a recording of the second movement of Henryk Gorecki's sometimes strident Symphony No. 3, the dancers are pulled forward by an unseen force, then recede like the tides.

Ballet British Columbia artistic director John Alleyne was represented by the neoclassic ne·o·clas·si·cism also Ne·o·clas·si·cism  
n.
A revival of classical aesthetics and forms, especially:
a. A revival in literature in the late 17th and 18th centuries, characterized by a regard for the classical ideals of reason, form,
 quartet Split House Geometric, to Arvo Part's churning Fratres, calling for one couple to dance, then take their places, almost as ghosts, behind another couple. The dance, full of halted flow, featured for the women the jarring combination of baby-doll nighties over spandex.

There's a lusciousness to the Canadians' dancing, but at the end of the day, the dances on this tour were too similar in mood, tone, and even form: at least five of the seven pieces open with a lone figure on the stage. It makes one consider, wistfully, the adage that variety is the spice of life.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Review
Author:SMITH, AMANDA
Publication:Dance Magazine
Article Type:Dance Review
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Jan 1, 1999
Words:566
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